I was waiting for the weekend to write another
post. Not that I was busy, I just could not start working, stuck in the
"making-up my mind" phase. Procrastination doesn't spare anyone.
Following is a short expression (it's quite long actually) of how a typical
engineering student prepares for a test in college.
I have a test
tomorrow, need to score good in this one because others didn't go well. There is a
full day and full night to go so I am relaxed. I plan out my schedule, decide
to start preparing from today evening after having sufficient sleep to pull an
all-nighter. But no, I have to go to the market to buy some stuff I have been
postponing and better to do that today because I have to "study"
later. I go to the market, and I find some really cool stuff too which wasn't there
earlier so I have to buy that (Obviously!). I come back by 5 pm. I should have
started preparing by now but I can't because I had to sleep to be awake at
night. So I sincerely set an alarm to wake up after exactly 2 hours of sleep. After having a a very good nap I wake up hungry, but how can I be hungry?
Because it's dinner time already. May be my alarm tone was so charming that it
sent me into an "inception dream" (there is no such thing, don't Google
it!). #MovieReference
Dinner lasts
for another hour, find some friends on my way back from hostel mess to my
room, had to ask their preparation status. They say they haven't started, I
know they are lying. Yeah, I have a lie detector fixed in my head; I borrowed
it from Nick Fury. So I am a little tensed now, just a little. But I am confident
enough; it's just a small test.
What do I
need now? I start looking for notes to study from. I had them yesterday but
can't find them now. Oh! I had lent it to a friend for photostat, I didn't get
it back. I sprint to her room, ask for my notes. She is a fellow procrastinator;
she is watching Friends (the tv series) to freshen up "before"
starting to study. We discuss the episode and some other local gossips and
another hour passes. I get the notes but I need coffee for maximum concentration. Got
coffee now, all is set, I settle down and seriously go through the index, mark
the pages to study and happily cross the ones not to be covered. Suddenly my
phone beeps, some discussion has started on the group chat
regarding the syllabus. They say another chapter is also included in tomorrow's
test syllabus. Little more stressed I skip the introductory part of the
chapter, let's start with the important topic. I go through the text, didn't get it,
read it again. Nah! Still nothing. I need to google it, I am lost in phone now
and have to check facebook occasionally because my friends are commenting on my
profile photo so I have the moral obligation to reply them.
So, this
topic seems tough, it has a derivation which has five sections. Doesn't seem
important. I skip the topic for morning. This continues for few hours. It's
quite late now but I haven't done much. Feeling tired, I decide to take a short
nap because I care about my health so much (only when it's not required). I'll
get up in half hour and finish everything. To my disappointment I wake up half + three hours later. Sun is out already, my heart skips a beat. The test is in about two hours. Feeling
horrified, I call a friend and get a list of expected questions and FAQs. I
have no time now, but I can see the topics mentioned in these questions.
Ultimately I haven't even covered half of the syllabus. I reach college and try
to grab the seat closer to the geeks so that I can peek in their sheets.
Finally, I write the test, trying to extract the most of my poor photographic
memory. Hoping for the examiner to be either lazy or too happy so that he just misses the fact that none of the answers make any sense, here I am, proud of my "hard work".
Everyone’s story might differ from this but
more or less it will be the same. Temptations and distractions overpower our minds very easily. Beating procrastination would require strong commitment and today with so many distractions around it's tough for students to be consistent with hard work.
And why should we be, when last day studying gets us good marks. Thanks to our
awesome education system where "if you cram, you top the exam".
Procrastination has been a by-product of such system. Obviously, why to cram
every day when it can be done on the last day.